CRD directors at last week’s meeting, outraged that the province was stepping in, voted to ask Robinson for an extension to allow the mediation to resolve outstanding issues with the strategy. They also voted to allow Hicks to present his case to the mediator. The mediator on Friday agreed to the request.

Earlier, Hicks was not invited to take part in mediation because he didn’t represent a municipal government, although he represents a area larger than Highlands and Metchosin.

Seven of the 13 municipalities in the CRD – Saanich, Central Saanich, North Saanich, View Royal, Highlands, Colwood and Esquimalt – are worried that allowing CRD water to be piped to the Juan de Fuca area could lead to urban sprawl.

It’s a claim both Hicks and Sooke council disagree with suggesting local official community plans protect those areas from over development.

Hicks has always maintained there should be no barrier to water in the Juan de Fuca, which is an unincorporated area that includes the west coast of Vancouver Island from Otter Point to Port Renfrew, as well as the communities of East Sooke, Malahat and Willis Point.

Sooke faces many of the same challenges as the Juan de Fuca, said Mayor Maja Tait.

“We do have areas in Sooke that don’t have piped water, mainly in more rural areas. With the way the regional growth strategy is proposed we may never have water to these areas,” she said. “We do have residents now, due to climate change, that truck in their water, and it’s also a concern for firefighting in certain areas.”

The CRD set a date for mediation for Dec. 6-7, before receiving the Nov. 30 deadline letter from the province.

Hicks welcomed the opportunity to present to the mediator.

“The reality is the CRD is giving us an equal chance to be part of the mediation,” he said. “I just don’t know if it’s legal. The interesting part is what the province is going to say.”

If mediation fails, the growth strategy stalemate could be sent to binding arbitration by the province.

Hicks said he’s “100 per cent confident” that if it goes to arbitration, the decision would favour the Juan de Fuca Electoral Area.

The growth strategy deals with development within the CRD, including land use, ecosystem preservation, transportation, economic potential and measures to contain urban sprawl.

The strategy is supposed to be updated every five years. The proposed growth strategy has taken more than 10 years at a cost of $1 million, according to CRD staff.